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Lisa Harborth

is a German arts manager with a preference for Latin America. After her bachelor's degree in musicology and arts management at the University of Music Franz Liszt Weimar, she is currently doing her masters in International Management and Sustainability at the University of Hamburg.

Newest content of Lisa Harborth

The Costa Rican arts sector
How culture and management are connected 2017-11-13
For this interview, our correspondent Lisa Harborth talked to Alejandra Solórzano, a cultural producer who is working for the Ministry of Culture and Youth in Costa Rica. They spoke about the local arts sector, the unique position of concert bands in this small country and their link to the non-existing army.
» How culture and management are connected

The art market in Guatemala
A one-way street 2017-09-11
Lisa Harborth and Alexis Rojas talk about the arts sector in Guatemala and its mutual relationship with politics and society, the influence of the international art market on local artists and the personal purposes of his art.
» A one-way street

The arts sector in Mexico-City
Arts management courses to empower local artists 2017-06-12
Mexico Citys program Small Cultural Enterprises was started ten years ago to support local artists in building up their own enterprises. The program teaches general knowledge in arts management and supports artists in building up their own enterprises. Small Cultural Enterprises thereby compensates the lack of management education during artistic studies in university.
» Arts management courses to empower local artists

The Mexican arts sector
Good connections are more important than artistic quality 2017-05-30
Aaron Hernandez Farfan, a Mexican actor and cultural manager, together with his company Agua Quemada Creatividad visualizes problems affecting the Mexican society, such as violence and injustice. With Lisa Harborth, he talks about the cultural system in Mexico, how politics influence it and which challenges affect the work as an artist in Mexico.
» Good connections are more important than artistic quality
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